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ID Cards
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No best answer has yet been selected by noxlumos. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I, for one, will resist any attempt to make me have one (especially if i have to pay).
On a side note - do you remember when they bought in the photocards for your driving license? They wacked the prices up -insisted you had to have one and what use are they exactly? Waste of time and money.
I dont oppose photo id for driving in principle but i still have to carry around my tatty old paper license and my photocard has no use what so ever. An ill concieved and badly implemented idea - just like ID cards.
ID cards will become Labour's Poll Tax.
Oddly enough I agree with Gary, I just do not trust the governement these powers and with figures like �500 a go being bandied about I really think some level of civil disobedience is inevitable if they insist on going through with it.
Hopefully Tony and his cronies will conclude that it's too much like hard work and ditch the idea at some point.
I doubt there will be many 'refuseniks' like myself, but I do believe there will be masses of people who will accept possession of an ID card, but will refuse to pay for the 'privelage' of owning one. I'll be interested to see how such cases play out in court. I foresee chaos!
It is not odd that me and Loosehead agree on this - wet liberals like me resent it and Looseheads like Loosehead also resent the intrusion from the state (am i right Loosehead?).
This is the arrogance of power - the government are too blind to see that this is universally despised and will come back to bite them on the a**e.
The only people to benefit will be some useless IT company who wins the massive contract to bring this in, will takes years to do it and run massively over budget (like virtually every government IT scheme) only for it to be scrapped like the poll tax.
Yes I think so Gary, we may often inhabit opposite ends of the Political spectrum but I think on this sort of thing there is a common fear, possibly a fear of different outcomes but none the less it's common ground that on this occasion I'll happily share. I just don't trust the government not to misuse this kind of power. Someone asked a question a couple of weeks back about taking DNA from everyone at birth which illicited a similar attitude from me.
There are lots of people who will see this as another form of governement nannying and also another form of extortion, I can forsee a lot of problems if the government presses on regardless.
Tesco checkout
How Tenji: Hello, can you sell me a one-month travel insurance policy?
Tesco: Yes sir, let me have your ID card... Thanks. Do you have any current health problems?
HT: No, nothing.
Tesco: You sure, sir?
HT: Yes, why?
Tesco: Well it says here you were at the doctor's last week.
HT: Oh, that was nothing serious.
Tesco: Let me just... Oh yes, touch of the old Farmer Giles... No that wont be a problem. Probably sitting on cheap charter flight seats that's to blame. I see you're going British Airways this time around, though. Very wise. Oops, pressed the wrong button. [Picture of How Tenji's hideously empiled anus appears on every plasma screen in the shop, accompanied by name, address, telephone number and email address].
Old lady in queue: Oooh they look sore dear. Have you tried Anusol?
Tesco: I see your car had a bit of a struggle with the MOT. Garage not keen on Communists?
HT: Can we just do the travel insurance, and these frozen peas?
Tesco: Peas? Shall I just check that don't have a genetic predisposition to pea allergy? It'll only take a minute to scan your genome... I understand. You're in a bit of a hurry. Very good sir. Next please.
http://www.therockalltimes.co.uk/2005/07/04/id-card.html
I was thinking about this though.... would people be happy to have /carry an ID card if it replaced the driving licence and passport for instance?
Another reason to worry about them :
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/01/18/lefties_jinx_id_ cards/